Why use a Mail Fetcher versus an Email Forwarder?

Forwarded emails has the tendency to cause blacklisting with email providers, and forwarders will cause your emails to be marked as spam. In addition, blacklisting also causes the originating server's sending reputation to be penalized since it was the last server to send the email. Ultimately, your server becomes blacklisted with the email provider and the blacklist will affect all of the users on the server.

One solution to blacklisting is to this is to stop email forwarding altogether. Using a mail fetcher, one can access email in a remote system without the mail being routed through that system's server. With this process, you can flag a message as spam without affecting your email server's reputation.

Google Mail Fetcher

Google Mail Fetcher utilizes POP3 to retrieve emails from up to 5 email accounts and then parses the emails for spam. Once set up, Google Mail Fetcher will check the email accounts on a regular basis, and the new email will appear in your inbox with a label attached.

Google Mail Fetcher set up:

Log into your Gmail account

Click the gear icon located on the upper right hand corner of the page and select Settings

Click the Accounts and Import tab

Locate Check mail from other accounts: and click Add a mail account

Type the email address you are wanting to fetch in the new window and click Next

Select Import emails from my other account (POP3) and click Next

Enter the following information:

In the username field, update the username to the full email address

In the password field, enter the password for the email address

In the POP Server field, ensure that the mail server is formatted as mail.example.com

In the Port dropdown menu, ensure that the port 110 is selected

Leave a copy of retrieved message on the server: (Advanced) This settings leaves a copy of the email Google retrieves on your server.

Always use a secure connection (SSL) when retrieving mail: Port 995 is required if this option is selected. We do not recommend using this setting unless you have an SSL installed.

Label incoming messages: This setting automatically labels fetched emails and is recommended for most users to reduce confusion.

The next page will have a confirmation that the email address has been added. You can also configure the mail fetcher to send as the email address you added, or select No and click Finish if you want to configure the setting later.

If you selected Yes, I want to be able to send mail as example@example.com please follow the steps below for additional configuration:

Enter a Name, leave Treat as an alias selected, and click Next Step

Name: This will be the displayed name in the message sent.

Treat as an alias: This setting is useful when you have other email address that you want Gmail to treat as if they were your primary Gmail address. Click Learn more for additional information and use cases.

Use the following information:

SMTP Server: Format the server as mail.example.com

Port: Leave the port number as 587

Username: Use the full email address

Password: Use the password for the email address

Ensure that the Secured connection using TLS option is selected

Click Add Account

Once the account credentials are verified, a verification email is sent to the email address that was just added. Simply click the link in the email to finalize the changes or enter the code in the Confirm verification and add your email address screen.

You can now select the email address in the From: field when creating a message/reply via a dropdown menu.